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John Pasden

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I guess I missed something… how is again that you can tell it is fake ? Other than the obvious rule of thumb Chinese people tell me (assume everything is fake in China). Beyond that — can you get REAL Sunkist in China ? Because I often wonder if some of the faking isn’t entirely in vain, if something is a brand Chinese DON’T know, then what the hell does it do except to give a brand which hasn’t yet entered Chinese market FREE widespread name recognition.

Stumbled on your site while looking for pics of those chinese welder masks that all the women wear. Anyway, very interesting blogs you got here. I hope to make it out to Shanghai in August (I’m from LA).

why do ppl priate even fruits? ppl are crazy about named brands ,such like gucci, LV and parada even thou they are counterfeited with the faked labels sticked on. most of ppl are proud of the bands and exorbitant prices (they could!)which indicate their wealth. they dont care about the quality or praticability as long as it’s a BRAND. i’m not an appraiser ,but i know there are lot of faked labels. peepin up!

Not just the Chinese. You can ask Kiwi Chris (TaiChiMaster) about your beloved KIWI Fruits … you know, the hairy outside egg shape, the tart green insides, famously coupled in artificial varieties such as Strawberry Kiwi juices and candies. Anyways, Kiwi fruits, like the New Zealand Kiwi Bird, are famous worldwide. So famous, and mainstream consumed, that California has their own kiwi fruits grown in California. They sell in the stores as kiwi.

But New Zealand invented that name, “Kiwi” and did all the footwork for marketing it to the global fruit consumers.

So now, New Zealand, has their renamed their New Zealand grown Kiwi fruit to “Zespri” … so what this one example shows is that people pirate fruits, and putting a small sticker on a fruit is just taking whatever marketing that’s already been applied into action on a possibly inferior or even superior product.

To hash it out further, think 2Pac and then replacing him with 50Cent – there was a 10,000,000 person market that needed to be filled. Notorious BIG could not fulfill that market and was ultimately murdered, too. So in comes the marketing genius of Aftermath Records led by Dr. Dre. The list goes on….

Oh yeah, check out the 8gb USB Flash Drives on ebay —- 8 GB on a tiny flash drive – they’re obviously fake and have SONY stamped onto them – and for that reason, people buy them, perhaps nievely believing that the decades and decades of Sony marketing and promotion will protect their investment.

Reminds me of a friend recounting a conversation with her mother while visitng her in southern Manchuria last summer. (My friend, for all intents and purposes, is pretty much Canadian now)

Mother – mentions some thing about an issue with counterfit products that made the local news
Friend – Yes, it’s a good thing we don’t have counterfit issues like that for food in Canada
Mother -Well, you must have a little. At least for the big names, like Coke, right?
Friend – Uh, no? Really, there’s no counterfit foods at all. The government’s very strict on that sort of thing. A coke is a coke.
Mother –flabbergasted REALLY??

Her and I had a bit of a head-shaking chuckle about it when she got home. Seeing this makes me realise where the mum was coming from, though.

My take and concern on the fake foods are more than just the labels. US is by no means perfect, but at the least there are accountable agencies and legal mechanisms to ensure a minimum standards of safety and quality of the food products sold domestically in US. You do not necessarily have such rigorous efforts in other countries. Using the orange example here. WHAT did they use to cultivate the oranges? Where did they grow these oranges (anywhere near the river tributaries of the toxic industrial material contamination scandal in Northeast China, or other areas we don’t yet know about)? What kinds of pesticides did they use? Sweet or not, would you feed an orange or two laden with lead, mercury, DDT, or dioxin to your kids or yourself?

What is even more concerning to me is the counterfeit pharmaceuticals from China. I wish they will never get out to the world market. But this is only a wish…

You do get what you paid for, albeit it may cost you more than you think. I personally avoid food products originated from the PRC. I am willing to pay more to buy stuffs made in Japan, South Korea, Taiwan, and, of course, the US.

Thanks for CC’ing your Nalencia picture. It’s a great illustration of a pirated product in China. IP Dragon is focused on gathering, commenting and sharing information on intellectual property in China. Thanks again. Great site by the way.